Bolt, Blake shine again in Zurich.

Jamaican sprint duo Usain Bolt and Yohan Blake dominated the 100 and 200m at the Diamond League meet in Zurich Thursday, but Kenyan 800m star David Rudisha was upstaged by Ethiopian tyro Mohammed Aman.

In a high-quality night of action featuring 14 Olympic champions, training partners Bolt and Blake set new meeting records of 19.66 and 9.76 seconds in the 200 and 100m respectively.

Fresh from his second successive triple gold haul at the Olympics, Bolt came around the bend into the final stretch just ahead of compatriot Nickel Ashmeade on his inside.

And then the imposing 26-year-old switched on the afterburners in his drive phase to ensure a comfortable win in his favoured event.

Blake overcame a false start by top US sprinter Tyson Gay to hold his nerve in a 100m raced in chilly, wet conditions at a packed Letzigrund Stadium.

The 22-year-old, who won double sprint silver behind Bolt in the London Games, rocketed out of his blocks at the second time of asking to power through the line ahead of compatriot Nesta Carter (9.95) and American Ryan Bailey (9.97).

“I am not at all surprised that after the Olympics I am coming out so strong and so fast. It’s because my coach has a plan for me,” said Blake of Glen Mills, who also coaches Bolt.

“Next year I can be even better,” he warned.

But there was disappointment for Rudisha, the blazing two-lap specialist who was bidding to better his own world record of 1min 40.91sec he set when winning 800m gold at the London Games earlier this month.

With all talk of the record bid, no one had counted on the kick of 18-year-old Aman, who finished sixth at the Olympics but who importantly last year became the first and last man to defeat Rudisha since 2009.

Rudisha’s pacemaker missed his first lap target by more than 1sec, and with any chance of a world record completely out of the window, the 23-year-old Kenyan world champion found himself in front but in a real dogfight with Aman, who kicked as the duo rounded the last bend.

Aman held on for a convincing win in a personal best of 1:42.53, with Rudisha timing 1:42.81.

One Olympic champion to also shine was Jamaica’s Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, who rebounded from two successive losses to Carmelita Jeter in Lausanne and Birmingham to easily trump the American in the women’s 100m in 10.83sec.

Other London champions to win were France’s Renaud Lavillenie in the men’s pole vault (5.70m), Croat Sandra Perkovic in the women’s discus (63.97m), American Sanya Richards-Ross in the women’s 400m (50.21sec) and Russian Ivan Ukhov in the men’s high jump (2.31m).

But American Christian Taylor (triple jump) and Felix Sanchez (400m hurdles) were both eclipsed by veterans, Italy’s Fabrizio Donato (17.29m) and American Angelo Taylor (48.29sec) respectively.

And American Brittney Reese could only finish ninth in the women’s long jump, retiring after aggrevating a stress fracture in her ankle.